Your foreign Fiancee needs permission from the US government to
allow her or him to enter the USA. This is called a K1 Fiancee visa.

First we work together to produce a thick packet of forms, evidences
and civil documents. This is required to demonstrate that
you are eligible to apply, and that your true agenda is a
genuine life together, not immigration fraud.

First we work together to produce a thick packet of forms, evidences
and civil documents. This is required to demonstrate that
you are eligible to apply, and that your true agenda is a
genuine life together, not immigration fraud.

The application itself looks pretty simple. It asks for "name, rank
serial number". This often leads to overconfidence. Couples who
really don't understand what all will happen, fill in the blanks
themselves, submit the petition and usually end up shooting themselves in the foot.

This typically results in the leading cause of denial, failure to
convince the consular officer who interviews your fiance
that your relationship is genuine, is "bona fide".

Sadly, US immigration has had bad experience in the past, with
this type of "romance" visa. Many who were not eligible applied
for fiance visa's. In reality they were not seeking a marriage
partner but only seeking admission to the USA. Gold diggers,
gigolos, con-men even terrorists have used fiance visas as
back door into the USA. Normally in USA one is "innocent until
proven guilty". Because of the bad apples who have abused
fiance visas before you, now immigration takes the attitude
"guilty until proven innocent"

This is how a lot of couples get in trouble. They
sadly end up shocked at what happens at the interview.

Because they are "IN LOVE", they assumed no special effort to prove
their situation was needed.

They assumed the consular officer would instantly approve.

So, they filled in the forms themselves, filing in basic
"Name, rank and serial number" or they hired a cheap online
form filling service.

Those cheap "bare bones" applications, are usually enough to get
one's "foot in the door". It's usually enough to get your fiancee
sitting opposite a consular officer for the interview.

Sadly, just having your "chance at bat", chance to interview,
is NOt enough win approval. It is not enough to demonstrate your
application is "bona fide".

Now the consular officer, must dig, ask a lot of questions, and
it can easily deteriorate into what feels like an interrogation
until he feels he has enough feeling about the case
to make a yes or no decision.

If he is short of time, or impatient or close minded or in
a bad mood, or if your Fiance is not fast and fluent enough
to provide convincing answers, the simpler course for the officer,
the safer course that does not risk his career or professional
reputation is to deny.

My signature philosophy at VisaCoach is we get achieve success by
"doing the consular officers job for him".

What that means is that, well, a consular officer starts with certain
expectation of what an eligible couple looks like. If we show
him proof that the couple's situation matches his expectations,
then we move the case towards approval.

So when I work with a couple, I first discuss with them what they
have been doing, then I explain what the consulate they will
be interviewed at expects. Then I suggest what actions the couple
should take, to do "the right thing".

Doing the right thing however is not good enough.

Next we need to DOCUMENT that the right thing was done.
I teach my clients ways to create evidences that show what happened.
And I review them to pick and choose the most relevant and effective ones.

But having evidences that the right thing was done still isn't good enough.

Last, we have got to make sure the officer sees the evidences.

That's what a bare bones DIY or cheap form filing service misses,
a full set of well thought out, well selected, and properly presented
persuasive evidences of a couple's bona fides.

And that is what a VisaCoach front loaded application is.

We include with every application high quality evidences, specifically
demonstrating that you have a bona fide relationship, we "front
load" the evidences in the original application, because we know
these evidences will get into the consular officers hands, before
the interview starts.

We know that the consular officer ALWAYS reviews the original
application materials before the interview starts.

My "front loaded" applications are crafted to do the consular
officers job for him. During his review, before your fiance sits
down in front of his desk, the consular officer should have
already seen and reviewed the type of evidences that allow him to
confidently approve your visa. He should be very receptive to say
yes, even before your fiance sits down.

The petition package is mailed to USCIS, the United States Customs
and Immigration Service, to their offices in Dallas Texas.

In 2018 USCIS takes about 7 to 8 months to review and approve.
This includes a criminal background check conducted on YOU, by the FBI.

This is vastly slower than in recent years, and is due to the
executive orders issued by President Trump for USCIS to conduct
more vigorous reviews, so called "extreme vetting" of all cases.

When finished, USCIS hands the case over to the US State
Department's National Visa Center (NVC) based in
New Hampshire.

Fiance visa applications are held only briefly at NVC, usually
a few weeks, just long enough for NVC to assign a new case number and
forward your file via diplomatic pouch to the consulate assigned to your Fiancee.

About the same time your case is on it's way to the overseas consulate,
I update you on what the current procedures are at the consulate.

I guide you and your fiance on what needs to be done at your Fiancee's country,
how to schedule the interview, where to take the medical, what final
fees are needed, and how to obtain required official documents
such as Police Clearances and Certificates of Singleness or No Marriage.

Here in the USA, I guide you as to what financial evidences you must
send your fiance as well as preparing the affidavit of support for your
signature.

Finally in the run up to the interview, I provide a detailed, personalized
checklist on what all your Fiance should bring with
him or her to the consulate on the day of the interview.

This is especially important, as forgetting to bring a required document
can cause, weeks of delays, as even if a missing document is provided the
following day, the consulate officers have already moved on to
new cases, and they make it a very low priority to re-open a case
to verify a case is complete after a late submission.

One to two weeks before the interview your Fiance must undergo, a thorough
medical exam and review of his or her vaccinations at a clinic
appointed by the consulate.

Finally your Fiance attends the interview at the US consulate.

This is the BIG event.

During the interview, the consular officer must be CONVINCED
your the relationship is bona fide and not a sham for immigration purposes.

As previously mentioned, at the interview, is where the high quality
VisaCoach "front loaded application" typically wins the day.

The consular officer always reviews the case file before
the interview starts. We craft your application so that
he finds many good reasons why he should trust you and approve the visa.
Even before he invites your Fiance to sit in front of his desk,
we want him to have seen our carefully selected and presented evidences and be
mentally prepared to say "yes".

Typically, the interview turns into a fast and friendly, formality.
Most VisaCoach clients hear "Welcome to the USA" in just 3 to 4 minutes

One to Two weeks later your Fiancee's passport with visa are delivered,
and your Fiancee has six months to start the trip to join you in the USA.

After arrival to the USA you have 90 days to marry.

Sorry, but even though, you have persevered and gotten the Fiance Visa,
and your fiance has come to the USA, and you have had your wedding
and honeymoon, US immigration is still not done with you.

We overcame their skepticism and convinced them that your relationship
was bona fide so they issued the Fiance Visa. But I am afraid we have
to do it all over again. And not once but twice.

After the wedding your Fiance does not have to leave the country, she
or he can remain with you as your spouse, IF you apply to
US immigration for permission for her to remain in the USA as a
lawful permanent resident. This is called Adjustment of Status. Your new
spouse adjusts her or his status from that of a temporary 90 day
fiance visa visitor to a permanent resident.

At the end of the Adjustment of Status application process your
spouse gets what is known as the Green Card.

But US immigration is still cautious, still skeptical. The Green card
that is granted is only "conditional". Meaning it is good for only two
years.

Before the two years is up we apply once again. This time it is called
"Application for Removal of Conditions on Residence" We apply, it is granted
and now your spouse gets a regular Green Card that does not have conditions.

A year later, your spouse, IF SHE WANTS, is eligible to apply for US citizenship
and get a US passport.

And don't worry. Even though there are many steps, VisaCoach is ready to
help you through each and every step,
from Fiance Visa through to Conditional Green Card then Un-conditional
Green Card and finally to US Citizenship

Most Consulate interviews go on for 15 to 30 minutes

most of MY client's PASS their interviewin UNDER 5 minutes

This is because we provide the information we want the consular officer to see, 'up front' as
part of the petition submitted originally to USCIS. The consular officer will typically review the package prior to the interview.
When he reads the extensive and persuasive evidence that we have logically laid out for him, he should be convinced of the 'bona fides'
of the relationship before the interview even starts.

This makes asking any remaining questions more a formality than a fact finding,
interrogation, and leaves very little for the consular officer to say besides 'Welcome to America'.

It certainly requires extra work and effort, to produce a 100 to 150 page petition, versus a few dozen pages that most un-motivated preparers
are willing to submit, but the benefit is PRICELESS as it results in
of taking the pressure off of the fiancee to :"PERFORM" at the interview, thus improves chance of SUCCESS.

Fred Wahl is Bonded by the State of California as an Immigration Consultant,
qualified to coach in the non-legal, technical procedures of immigration form preparation, and document selection.
Whenever legal advice or legal representation is needed, the service of a qualified
Immigration Attorney should be sought. Access to and use of VisaCoach.com and Services are subject to the following
Visa Coach terms of service.